anti-Semitism Europe

ANTI-SEMITISM IN EUROPE…….

The only point where the Tundra Tabloids finds fault with the article, is the insinuation that justified criticism of the failed policies of multiculturalism (term used: ‘cosmopolitanism’) is somehow indicative of ‘far-right’ politics or populism.

It’s the failure of European governments’ not insisting on full integration (which leads to eventual assimilation) of immigrants that’s the problem, coupled with their infatuation with welfare state socialism, when they should have been totally discrediting socialism in all of its forms, as a failed ideology.

Trying to prop up failed socialist welfare states is what got Europe into the present predicament.

All immigrants fare better in a society that centers on safeguarding individual liberties and property rights within a full free market capitalist society, than in one that focuses on ‘group rights’ and within a socialist nanny state funded by a draconian income tax system.

Multiculturalism can only exist in a society that is based upon the idea of “group rights”, which is an anti-thesis to the idea behind individual rights, which is why the US for many decades (until the rise of the socialists) successfully melded many nations into one in what has been called, the “melting pot”. E pluribus unum, Out of many, one”. KGS

NOTE: No, US society is not a perfect society, because people are imperfect, but its model is the best human kind could create.

H/T: E.G.

The Full-Blown Return of Anti-Semitism in Europe

by Guy Millière. On April 19, the Corfu synagogue, in Greece, was burned. How many Jews live in Corfu today? One hundred and fifty. How many Jews live in Greece? Eight thousand, or about 0.8% of the population. For some, it seems these figures are still far too high. Two other synagogues were burned in Greece during the past year. Anti-Semitic graffiti on the walls are spreading all over the country.

What happened in Greece is happening everywhere across the European continent.

During the last decade, synagogues were vandalized or set on fire in Poland, Sweden, Hungary, France. Anti-Semitic inscriptions are being drawn on building walls in Paris, Madrid, Amsterdam, London, Berlin and Rome. Jewish cemeteries are being ransacked. Jews are being attacked on the streets of most major cities on the continent. In the Netherlands, the police use « decoy Jews » in order to try arrest the perpetrators red-handed.

Jewish schools are being placed under police protection everywhere, and are usually equipped with security gates. Jewish children in public high schools are bullied; when parents complain, they are encouraged to choose another place of learning for their children.

In some cities such as Malmö, Sweden, or Roubaix, France, the persecution suffered by the Jewish community has reached such a degree that people are selling their homes at any price and leaving. Those who stay have the constant feeling that they are risking their lives: they must be extremely streetwise and carry no sign showing who they are. In 1990, approximately 2000 Jewish people lived in Malmö; now there are fewer than 700, and the number is decreasing every year.

Jews now, in fact, have to be streetwise in all European countries: men wearing a skullcap usually hide it under a hat or a cap. Owners of kosher restaurants located on avenues where protests are organized close their facilities before the arrival of the participants — even if the protest is about wages or retirement age. They know too well that among the demonstrators, there will always be some who will express their rage at the sight of a Jewish name or a star of David on a store front. In Paris, on Labor Day, May 1st, in front of a Jewish café on Avenue of the Republic, several hundred demonstrators stopped and began to boo « Jews » and « Zionists ». A man coming out of the café was assaulted until police officers arrived on the scene.

[…]

It is an anti-Semitism that is widespread in the Muslim population that settled in Europe, and it would be easy to think that it is strictly an Islamic phenomenon, but the anti-Semitism as it exists today in the Muslim world was heavily influenced by the old European anti-Semitism. And what the Muslim immigrants bring with them can easily find resonances in European non-Muslim populations. Copies of fraudulent Protocols of the Elders of Zion in Arabic are sold in Islamic bookstores from one end of the continent to the other,and they also circulate abundantly again in many European languages, under the mantle or via internet.

It is also an anti-Semitism that allows the far right (TT: Read = ultra-Nationalist Left) to restate its rejection of « cosmopolitanism » — an adjective on the European continent that has always been used to point out the Jews — in a context where, because of the European economic decline, nationalist tensions and isolationism sound more and more seductive. It is an anti-Semitism that the left does not want to fight, because for it, the Muslims are oppressed, and the left is always on the side of those it defines as oppressed, whether or not the oppression is caused by the terrible governance inside those countries, or scapegoated onto someone else. European anti-racist movements say they are very concerned about « Islamophobic racism », but they are totally reluctant to discuss the anti-Semitism in the Muslim populations.

The new, current anti-Semitism now adds on to the old kind, the demonization of the State of Israel. The Islamic view of Israel is now the dominant view of Israel in Europe. The idea that Israel is a « colonial power » that has « robbed » people of their land, and is an « artificial State », even though the Jews have been on that land for three thousand years — and even though many states in the area, such as Jordan and Libya, and Iraq are even more illegitimate, their borders having been drawn on papre by the British in the 1920s — is a commonplace among journalists.

 

3 Responses

  1. I always ask one question after the Jews who is next? I have been scoffed, laughed and called an alarmist, however the hatred and violence we only be focused on other groups or religions until no one is safe and living in a constant state of fear . I draw this dreadful scenario, I am walking down a deserted street in any city of your choosing, a large mob all fired up with hate spots me, one of the mob cries out ‘there is one of ‘them’ lets get him. I t does not matter to the crowd if I am one of ‘them’ or not in their frenzy I am beaten or worse.

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